Hi all,
I’m on my second season with a breckwell p4000 (3rd for the stove, which was installed in 2019 before we bought the house). This forum has been extremely helpful in getting past a super bumpy first season (softwood pellets were used when hardwood is recommended, making the stove extremely dirty).
Took the whole damn thing apart at the end of august and cleaned it out. Got hardwood pellets, adjusted the fuel feed speed down to what is described in the manual as “normal” from high. The stove no longer made the house smell like smoke, and actually stayed on.
Things are not perfect though. I noticed that the burn pot still over fills even on the lowest setting (adjusted fuel feed down to low) and we deal with more klinkers than I would like. A lot of ash is produced. We have to keep the tamper open neatly 100% to keep the flame active at setting 1. Still, with a vacuum out every 3 days things seemed ok.
The stove is set up with a direct out “chimney” (on the list to add 8ft of vertical chimney, but technically this is to code), and as far as I can tell there is no specific outside air intake.
Which brings us to today. As we have the last 2 weeks, we ran the stove overnight. At 6AM we get a wake up call from the smoke detectors, and go out to discover that the pellets in the ash pan are on fire. The heat safety had flipped and the stove was trying to cool down, so that feature did work. However, I’m not sure what to make of the fact that we wound up in this situation to begin with. Today was going to be the day to clean the stove, but from everything I have read an every 3 day vacuum schedule where there is a lot of ash in the burn pot is not typical, so I think the problem is a little deeper than needing a vacuum.
Any thoughts on what I might be missing here?
I’m on my second season with a breckwell p4000 (3rd for the stove, which was installed in 2019 before we bought the house). This forum has been extremely helpful in getting past a super bumpy first season (softwood pellets were used when hardwood is recommended, making the stove extremely dirty).
Took the whole damn thing apart at the end of august and cleaned it out. Got hardwood pellets, adjusted the fuel feed speed down to what is described in the manual as “normal” from high. The stove no longer made the house smell like smoke, and actually stayed on.
Things are not perfect though. I noticed that the burn pot still over fills even on the lowest setting (adjusted fuel feed down to low) and we deal with more klinkers than I would like. A lot of ash is produced. We have to keep the tamper open neatly 100% to keep the flame active at setting 1. Still, with a vacuum out every 3 days things seemed ok.
The stove is set up with a direct out “chimney” (on the list to add 8ft of vertical chimney, but technically this is to code), and as far as I can tell there is no specific outside air intake.
Which brings us to today. As we have the last 2 weeks, we ran the stove overnight. At 6AM we get a wake up call from the smoke detectors, and go out to discover that the pellets in the ash pan are on fire. The heat safety had flipped and the stove was trying to cool down, so that feature did work. However, I’m not sure what to make of the fact that we wound up in this situation to begin with. Today was going to be the day to clean the stove, but from everything I have read an every 3 day vacuum schedule where there is a lot of ash in the burn pot is not typical, so I think the problem is a little deeper than needing a vacuum.
Any thoughts on what I might be missing here?